63ff8c51-79c3-08aa-ec89-5e1ff8b35d98 ~upd~ Review

In the early days of computing, databases used simple integers (1, 2, 3...) to identify records. As systems grew and began talking to each other, this caused "ID collisions." If two different databases both had a "User #10," merging those databases became a nightmare. UUIDs solved this by providing:

In a technical context, a UUID is a 128-bit number used to uniquely identify information in computer systems. Since this specific ID doesn't have a known "story" attached to it, I've drafted a blog post centered on the concept of 63ff8c51-79c3-08aa-ec89-5e1ff8b35d98